Although you can enjoy much of this website without javascript, we highly recommend that you enable it
in order to experience all available features.

Cookies on What Doctors Don't Tell You

We set cookies so you can manage your account and navigate the site, and to remember your cookie preferences so that you don't keep getting this message. To accept cookies, just keep browsing,
otherwise use the links on the right to adjust your cookie settings or find out more.

New guidelines now define half of all adults as having dangerously high blood pressure, requiring drugs for the rest of their lives. Lynne McTaggart and Bryan Hubbard offer alternatives to your doctor's prescription

About the author:&nbsp

Simon Singh's charity Sense About Science has been making unscientific claims that processed sugars aren't deadly or feed cancer-but hasn't revealed that it has been receiving funding from Coca-Cola

Simon Singh's charity Sense About Science has been making unscientific claims that processed sugars aren't deadly or feed cancer-but hasn't revealed that it has been receiving funding from Coca-Cola. The drinks giant has been spending millions of dollars on a dis-information campaign that has attempted to shift the focus away from its unhealthy products.

Coca-Cola has made contributions of lb20,681 between 2012 and 2013, and has retweeted Sense About Science's claims about the safety of processed sugars.

This year, the charity produced a 'position paper', Making Sense of Allergies, in which it said that health concerns about processed sugars in fast foods and drinks were a "red herring".

The charity's social media team also sent a Twitter message to restaurant owner John Vincent after he had written in a newspaper column that an academic had linked sugar to cancer. In its Tweet, Sense About Science said that sugar "does not create or fuel cancer."

The tweet and the comment in its position paper were retweeted by Coca-Cola's chief science officer Rhona Applebaum. Ms Applebaum has also attended a Sense About Science meeting in the US.

Mr Vincent said later: "It's really worrying the extent to which companies like Coca-Cola can fund organisations that the public might otherwise think are independent."

Coca-Cola is currently running a major dis-information campaign that claims that the obesity epidemic is caused by a lack of exercise, and not sugary drinks.